Two men arrested in a ghost gun and fraud bust on March 7, 2024 at their arraignment hearing in Manhattan Criminal Court.
Photo by Dean Moses
Eighteen people, including several city employees, were charged Thursday in a broad scheme to defraud the stateโs COVID-19 era pandemic unemployment benefits system, which investigators only learned of following an intertwined ghost gun bust.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said that the discovery of two people illegally manufacturing ghost guns, both employees of the Department of Homeless Services (DHS), led investigators to the sprawling alleged scheme among public employees to defraud the state of pandemic unemployment benefits.
One by one, the suspects were marched into Manhattan Criminal Court on Thursday to face arraignment on various charges connected to the scheme.
โThis is just great, old-fashioned, law enforcement work where you start pulling at threads, you bring a great case, and you donโt stop there,โ Bragg said. โYou donโt stop because you just charged the one crime, you keep pulling at the threads to see what are the other harms to the publicโ
The co-conspirators, several of them also DHS employees, allegedly stole personal identifying information from dozens of homeless individuals living in city-run shelters and used it to apply for unemployment benefits. Bragg alleged the defendants had filed 170 bogus unemployment applications and netted $1.2 million in ill-gotten gains.
The rogue DHS employees, which included the two alleged ghost gun manufacturers, allegedly shared the personal identifying info with various others, who purportedly included several other city employees. Bragg said the defendants include those working for DHS, the NYPD, the MTA, NYCHA, and the US Postal Service.
โMany of the defendants worked in government positions of trust,โ said Bragg. โThis type of conduct by our public servants is unacceptable and, as we allege, criminal.โ
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